A Familiar Story
It’s a familiar story
well told
and many of us can identify
with some part of him -
Odysseus the escapee,
Odysseus the wanderer,
the adventurer,
the explorer
the leaver of a past life
and embracer of the new.
We’ve all desired
to sail away
in boats that fly
as quick as thoughts
and at some point we’ve all
ate the sun god’s cattle
and paid the price.
We’ve all described our relationships
as “complicated,”
or wanted to.
It’s a familiar story
well told.
Each landing was a new challenge
in a newly discovered land
inhabited by Other people,
Other creatures
monstrous beings
to be vanquished by superior swords
or stolen to serve
as housekeepers or herders,
to be made into fish food if they resist.
It’s a familiar story
well told.
Then there’s the women
the temptresses
with their beautiful voices
weaving with shuttles made of gold.
Beautiful voices
but dangerous mouths
enticing us with their cupid lips.
And there’s always others,
the ones who seem all mouth
or have many mouths.
We can quieten them.
We can steal them away to become our maids,
our handmaids
as Atwood might describe them.
It’s a familiar story
well told.
And we’ll load up our ship with lotus fruit,
or lounge about while they do it,
and then we’ll forget the long swords
and how we fed the fish
with the heroes of the Resistance.
We’ll be the heroes when we get home.
It’s a familiar story
well told.
https://www.parislitup.com/plustore/p/plu-magazine-7
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